The Oxford History of Australia, Volume 5The postwar period has seen radical changes in Australia. Increased dependence on the United States, an influx of European and Asian immigrants, and a series of economic booms and recessions have confronted Australians with the challenge of surviving as an offshoot of European civilization in a largely Asian region and securing a prosperous future with declining support from European markets and investment. This final volume in the Oxford History of Australia details this volatile period, showing that while some Australians have resisted the pressures for change, most have adapted resourcefully and intelligently to the task of creating a new nation able to survive into the 21st century. |
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Page 28
... never seriously challenged . Thus the balance of power tilted away from the states towards Canberra , never to waver until the late 1960s brought the mineral boom to Queensland and Western Australia . As soon as the Japanese were ...
... never seriously challenged . Thus the balance of power tilted away from the states towards Canberra , never to waver until the late 1960s brought the mineral boom to Queensland and Western Australia . As soon as the Japanese were ...
Page 145
... never enough to earn them a seat in the lower house of any parliament outside Queensland ( except once by accident in New South Wales when a sitting Liberal member forgot to nominate ) . Nearly 90 per cent of DLP voters habitually gave ...
... never enough to earn them a seat in the lower house of any parliament outside Queensland ( except once by accident in New South Wales when a sitting Liberal member forgot to nominate ) . Nearly 90 per cent of DLP voters habitually gave ...
Page 151
... never ceased to plume himself on the part he played in great - power diplomacy over Suez . He sedulously kept every favourable press - cutting about his role in the crisis , and as an old man long in retirement he wrote to Eden on his ...
... never ceased to plume himself on the part he played in great - power diplomacy over Suez . He sedulously kept every favourable press - cutting about his role in the crisis , and as an old man long in retirement he wrote to Eden on his ...
Contents
The Brink of SelfDiscovery 19421951 | 1 |
The High Summer of Robert Menzies 19511965 | 87 |
The Search for New Directions 19661975 | 163 |
Copyright | |
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Aboriginal Adelaide Allen & Unwin American Australian government Bank Ben Chifley Brisbane Britain British Calwell Canberra capital Catholic cent Chifley government coalition colleagues Commission Commonwealth communist Country Party Curtin defence demand early economic election Evatt exports favour federal government forces Fraser government funding Garfield Barwick Gorton Gough Whitlam government's H. C. Coombs Hasluck Hawke High Court House of Representatives increased industry inflation investment issue Japanese Labor government Labor Party leader legislation Liberal major Melbourne ment Menzies government migrants million mineral movement Northern Territory overseas Papua New Guinea parliament political politicians post-war prime minister protest Queensland royal rural scheme schools Senate social South Australia South Wales suburbs Sydney Sydney Morning Herald Tasmania television took trade unions traditional tralian unemployment United University Victoria Vietnam voters wage wartime welfare Western Australia Whitlam government women workers young